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THEBVRIAL 
OF ROMEO 
ANDJVLIET 



A'^ PROSE 
FANCY BY 
RICHARD LE 
GALLIENNE 



• i 




1 





ITH^ Lif^r^AFIY OF 
CONGRESS. 

Two Qcastjs Keceived 

APR 1905 

^o^i'njrnt Entry 
yci^6^,/9 
Atm ^ JOtei Wdf 
/ /> 7 ^ 7 3 
<sopr A. 


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77 


— -I 



THE BVRIAL OF 
ROMEO fi JVLIET 



ne morning of all 
mornings the citi- 
zens of\^ronawere 
startled hy strange 
news.Tjagic fcrces^to which they 
had been accustomed to pay 
little heed;, had been at worlc in 
their city during the dark hour^ 
and young Romeo of the Mon- 
tagues, handsome^ devil-me-care 



tax, i>u*i u htJ 

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lad as they had known him, 
and little Juliet of the Cap- 
ulets, that mad-cap, merry gen- 
tle young mistress, lay dead, 
side by side in the church of 
Santa Maria. 

Death! surely they were used 
to death! and Love, flower of 
the clove! they were used to 
love. But here were love 
and death, that somehow they 
could not understand. So 
they hurried in wondering 


groups to Santa Maria^ that 
they might gaze at the dead 
lovers^ and thus perhaps come 
to understand, 

omeo and Juliet 
lay receiving their 
guests in the vault 
of the Capulcts, 
with a strange smile of wel- 
come for all who came. And 
their presence-chamber was 
bright with candles and dow- 
ers, and sweet with the sweet 






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smell of death. The air that 
had drunk in their wild words 
and their last long looks of 
heavenly love still hung about 
the dark corners^ as the air 
where a rose has been holds 
a little while the memory of 
its breath. ’^es! that morning, 
in that dank but shining tomb, 
you might draw into you the 
very breath of love. The 
air you breathed had passed 
through the sweet lungs of 


Juliet^ it had been etherialised 
with her holy passion, and 
washed clean with her love 
\y words. And now, for a lit- 
tle while yet, it feasted on the 
fair peace of their glad young 
faces. Tb'morro\y or the next 
day or the next week, they 
would belong to the unvisit- 
ed treasure-house of the past, 
but now this morning of all 
mornings, this day that could 
never come again, they still 


I 




belonged to the real and ra- 
diant present. 

Flowers there are that bloom 
but once in a hundred years^ 
but here in this tomb had blos - 
somed one of those marvel 
lous flowers that bloom but 
once throughout eternity. 
Poets and kings in after-times^ 
o men of \^rona^ will yearn 
to have seen what you look 
upon to-day For you_,you 
thick and greasy citizens, are 


chosen out of all time to be- 
hold this beauty: There were 
once in the world thousands 
of men and women who had 
heard the very words of Christ 
as they fell from His lips, 
words that we may only read 
There have been men, actual, 
living, foolish men, who have 
looked on at the valour of 
Horatius, men who, from the 
crowded banks of the Nile, 
have watched the living body 



I 





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of Cleopatra step into her 
gilded barge, men who, stand 
ing idle in the streets of Flor- 
ence, have seen the love-light 
start in the great Dante’s eyes, 
seen his hand move to his 
laden heart, as the little Bea- 
trice passed him by among 
her maidens. Base men of the 
past, by the indulgent accident 
of time, have been granted to 
behold these wonders, and now 
for you, O men of \^rona, a 


like wonder has been born. 

omeo and Juliet 
lay receiving tbeir 
guests in the vault 
of the Capulets^ 
with a strange smile of wel- 
come for all who came.-^sgD 
It had been an innocent little 
desire^ yet had all the world 
come against it. It had been 
a simple little desire^ yet too 
strong for all the world to 
break. 




iJsiluL brj/; oafricyga iy 

jk^v ^rlt nr 2 )RHi^ 

• ^Jajoq gD smIj 

4aw*k> sijfri* 6. rlij 

cjwtr.omtD Oiiw il& i- 1 iti 

T 

" 'ill til Uoxxifif ( ii. A'JKJi ^wi ' 
iiliov/ ->il> Ik. [>forl ?-*iy 
frtod tl .Ji sncl 

* ooJ sIjiLI 'i}<|(rif5 

a) bKow v/la lliv K»t oncf 



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Strange this enmity of the 
world to love^ as though men 
should take arms against the 
song of a bird, or plot against 
the opening of a flower. 

But no\y what was this strange 
homage to a love that a f^w 
hours ago had no friend in 
all the daylight, a fearful bliss 
beneath the secret moon? But 
yesterday a stupid old nurse, 
a herb-gathering friar, a rascal- 
ly apothecary had been their 


only friends, dnd now was all 
^the world come here to do 
their bidding. 

No need to steal again be- 
neath the shade of orchard 
walls, no need again to heed 
if lark or nightingale sanc5 in 
the reddening east. For the 
world had grown all warm 
to love, warm and kind as 
June to the rose. cas^^ss>6Q 







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!)(’" 1 ? »>.'b ,f!J''*l;-;qii'3) 

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I^» = '1 i •}' a: 4‘ 3rh bfi^qUmaf/ 
lf?!» ,l>ff«Ji’i:>b''!tr ion 

V *w -.n mIi *i6l ,qii-k40w 
fj) i vvoil jy^tinnow ^irib 
H wicrrjV ni Wno?*. !r{ Lfcfl 


* 


hree days lay Ro- 
meo and Juliet re- 
ceiving their guests 
in the vault of the 
Capulets^ with that strange 
smile of welcome for all who 
came. Three days the world 
worshipped the love it could 
not understand, hut still came 
dense and denser throngs to 
worship. For the news of 
the wonderful flower that 
had blossomed in\^rona had 



gone far and wide, and trav- 
ellers from distant cities kept 
pouring in to look at those 
strange young lovers, who 
had deemed the world well 
lost so that they might leave 
it together, 

Then the governor of the 
city decreed, as the time drew 
near when the two lovers 
must be left to their peace, 
and it was ill that any should 
lose the sight of this marvel, 







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that on the fourth day they 
should be carried through 
the streets in the eyes of all 
the people^ and then be bur- 
ied together in the vault of 
the Capulets — for by this 
burial in the same tomh^ says 
the old chroniclei; who was 
first honoured with the tell- 
ing of their sweet story the 
governor hoped to bring a 
bout a peace between the Mon- 
tagues and Gapulets^ at least 


for a little while, 
Meanwhile^ though Verona 
was a city of many trades 
and professions^ and love and 
death were idle thin^s^yetwas 
there little said of business all 
these days^ and little else was 
done but talk of the two lov- 
ers^ of whom_, indeed^ it was 
true^ as it has seldom been true 
out of holy writ^ that death 
was swallowed up in victory 
During these days, also, there 


\ ti 

r^slw! j*^'r:3rTT*, lo v t./ji 
Brn> 3\/ot.bfM; 
a&V/ -^bl' 

Ife tiisitioKt’ ^ ;‘i 

:wb) ^t1./I W;j*. 

•Aidl jiiu ‘4^^ 

-‘jrv'v :i ,l>3’»ly7i : // 'O , 

) .•>'»o‘::«g 1')1 / i.a* ;* 

f jr:,:b .r; ;w. •'?(:<{■ ior*: 

.'/•«/ i / ni Kio byiwolb Mi i 
■■'tv i .oaij •'/u!:. TTirlt 



stole d strange sweetness over 
tKe city, as though the very 
spirit of love Kad nested there^ 
and was filling the air with 
its soft breathing —as when, 
in the first days of spring, 
the birds sing so sweetly that 
broken hearts must hide away 
and hard hearts grow a little 
kind. Men once more spoke 
kindly to their wives, and e- 
ven coarse faces wore a gen- 
tle light— 'just as sometimes at 


evening the setting sun will 
turn to tenderness even black 
rocks and frowning towers. 

here were many 
wild stories afloat 
about the end of 
the lovers. Some 
said one way and some anoth- 
er. By some the story went 
that Romeo was already dead 
before Juliet had awakened 
from her swoon_, but others 
declared that the poison had 



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ibwiRAA 


t^l m^jrbi 3.*)fcV nt i^Haw 
y^j' 'lo k-ry/^j /fajtfi 

lf> \|i 3 «D 0 #. i^'ui 

i>b(r!W'7rari»T ikici 

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fSi Hfit ! f i JScalk^ "nvsT- ct^: Mf 
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not worked upon him until 
Juliet’s awakening had made 
him awhile forget that he 
was to die. There were those 
who professed to know the 
very words of their wild fare- 
well, and in fact there had 
been several witnesses of Ju- 
liets agony over the body of 
her lord. These had told how 
first she had raved and clung 
to him, and called him ‘Ro- 
meo’ ‘Sweet Sir Romeo^Hus- 


band, and many flower-like 
names, and had petted him 
and wooed him to come back. 
Then on a sudden she had 
cried, ‘God-a-mercy— how 
cold thou art!’ and looked at 
him long and strangely Then 
had she grown stern, and 
anon soft. Ganst thou not 
come back, my lovel Then 
must I follow thee. Not so 
far art thou on the way of 
death, but that I shall over- 


-l/r, 

!»Jils 4 tyAioy 

fr ’ -1 iD bigi^: liriu i 

jiritfLvrWo) irtirl tyrkwtr b 

•■' M , ^ 

bi^fi nsBijm n® nun 

V^r i r** tSOT • r. ri io 

tr biairjOi'l Uisi 

/I wlTi s^ibgm’iste' brnl' ^rinf^ 

HbftJb J*i :>Hii di 

..i 

*jrti tfOfli i«f’tfcQ'^:rtmjfTasi 

t ‘i. 

n*>rITl Iwoi MfTi 

O?* K/Ai-^^hAi woiiai b 7 «U 

■ki '-(t /r »3f{jt no mtt ii; t-it 

l.ii&dsi ‘L'j&irit ifiJ 


1 


'3riv.1n^t%r^ 

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take thee^ and together shall 
we go to Pluto’s realm^ and 
seek a kinder world.’ 'OS'SSO 
Thereat she had plunged 
Romeo’s dagger into her side, 
though some said she had 
stopped her hearts heating 
by the strong will of her 
great love. Tea — such were 
the distracted rumours-— 
some averred that at the last 
she had cursed Christ and his 
saints, and called upon Venus, 


whom, it was rumoured in 
awe-struck whispers, was be- 
ing worshipped once more 
in secret corners of the 
world. 

t was strong 
noon when, on 
the fourth day 
Romeo and Ju- 
liet were carried through the 
bright and solemn streets, 
that the world might be 
saved; saved as ever by the 









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spectacle and the worship 
of a mysterious nobility an 
uncomprehended greatness^ 
a beauty which haunts not 
its daily dreams, lifted up 
by the humble gaze of de- 
vout eyes into the empy- 
rean of greater souls, stirred 
to an unfamiliar passion, 
and fired with glimpses of 
a strange, unworldly truth. 

In the light of the sun, the 
fices of the two lovers, as 


they ky amid their flowers^ 
seemed to have grown a lit- 
tle weary but they still wore 
their sweet and royal smile, 
and their laurelled brows 
were very white and proud. 
And in the kces that looked 
upon them, as they moved 
slowly by with sweet death 
music, and the hushed march- 
ing of feet, and the wafted 
odour of lilies,, there was to 
be seen strangely blent a 




Ili'jL o/ elisrrJi 

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^reat pity for their tragedy 
and a heavenly tenderness 
for their love. It was like a 
dream passing down the 
streets of a dream^ so deep 
and tender was the silence^ 
(or only the hearts of men 
were speaking; though here 
and there a girl sobbed_, or a 
young man buried his face 
in his sleeve^ and the sternest 
eyes were dashed with the 
holy water of tears. And 


with the pity and tenderness^ 
who shall say but that in all 
that silent heart- speech there 
was no little envy of the two 
who had loved so truly and 
died in the springtide of their 
love^ before the ways of love 
had grown dusty with its 
summei; or dreary with its 
autumn^ before its dreams 
had petrified into duties^ and 
its passion deadened into use? 
' Whuld it were thou and I,’ 


I 


Vlk| ! rl^ 

111. ili iwb J!;u (W ■'•<1 
rbtitqj'-i'it'ii'i.to ili 
o'.vi; L-rfrio vvid. ‘jIii.! ut ^ 
Ixit (lij'H on !>'>/( J 
UfM'blD ^bij^sni 3fjl| rn }>3 

rlliw ^(• 1 Ji:, ■ ■■ - n 
yirnWib r/r lacj; 

Li*it»^ iiiu’) ojni jVrr.in'q b 
br_)ri'3ib<>'55> nchas-xi. 


•^1 brjn uofij ti nlui>'/ 















'lib {IJirij^ 


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said many wedded eyes one 
to the othei; delusively warm 
and soft for a moment_, but 
all cold and hard again on 
the morrow, 

And maybe some poet 
would say in his heart: 

‘ ir you loved her living, my 
Romeo, what were your love 
could you but see her dead!’ 
for indeed life has no beauty 
so wonderhul as the beauty 
of death. 


nd, as in all places 
and times^ there 
was a base rem- 
nant that gaped 
and worshipped not^ and 
in their hearts resented all 
this distinction paid to a 
nobility they could not rec- 
ognise^ as the like had grum- 
bled when Gmabue’s Madon- 
na had been carried through 
the streets in glory But of 
these there is no need that 




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k <!/} iiiivu natwrui^o. ?irl 




t '■* 
ifica 




- :)!)i i< 3 in ‘Wurt 

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we should take account^ any 
more than of the beasts that 
moved head down amid the 
pastures outside the town^ 
knowing not oF the wonder 
that was passing within. For 
the ass will munch his thistles 
though the' Son oF Man be 
his rider; nor will the sheep 
look aside from his grazing 
though Apollo he the herds- 
man. 


t length the sa- 
cred pageant was 
ended^ gone like 
the passing oFan 
aerial music^ and the people 
went to their homes silent^ 
with haunted eyes 3 while 
the Earthy which had giv- 
en this beauty took it back 
to herself and one more Per- 
sephone of human loveliness 
was shut within the gates 
oF the forgetful grave 







4 


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This book was designed j 
by James Howard Kehlei; I 
lettered by M'Elizabetb i 
Colwell and published by 
The Blue Sky Press^ Cbica- i 
go,MCMlV The edition 
is limited to soo copies on 
band-made paper and 25 " 
copies on Japan vellum, j 
This is Number- 


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